2nd International ICST Conference on Security and Privacy in Comunication Networks

Research Article

Exploiting MMS Vulnerabilities to Stealthily Exhaust Mobile Phone's Battery

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/SECCOMW.2006.359550,
        author={Radmilo  Racic and Denys  Ma and Hao Chen},
        title={Exploiting MMS Vulnerabilities to Stealthily Exhaust Mobile Phone's Battery},
        proceedings={2nd International ICST Conference on Security and Privacy in Comunication Networks},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={SECURECOMM},
        year={2007},
        month={5},
        keywords={},
        doi={10.1109/SECCOMW.2006.359550}
    }
    
  • Radmilo Racic
    Denys Ma
    Hao Chen
    Year: 2007
    Exploiting MMS Vulnerabilities to Stealthily Exhaust Mobile Phone's Battery
    SECURECOMM
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/SECCOMW.2006.359550
Radmilo Racic1,*, Denys Ma1,*, Hao Chen1,*
  • 1: University of California, Davis
*Contact email: racic@cs.ucdavis.edu, madl@cs.ucdavis.edu, hchen@cs.ucdavis.edu

Abstract

As cellular data services and applications are being widely deployed, they become attractive targets for attackers, who could exploit unique vulnerabilities in cellular networks, mobile devices, and the interaction between cellular data networks and the Internet. In this paper, we demonstrate such an attack, which surreptitiously drains mobile devices' battery power up to 22 times faster and therefore could render these devices useless before the end of business hours. This attack targets a unique resource bottleneck in mobile devices (the battery power) by exploiting an insecure cellular data service (MMS) and the insecure interaction between cellular data networks and the Internet (PDP context retention and the paging channel). The attack proceeds in two stages. In the first stage, the attacker compiles a hit list of mobile devices - including their cellular numbers, IP addresses, and model information - by exploiting MMS notification messages. In the second stage, the attacker drains mobile devices' battery power by sending periodical UDP packets and exploiting PDP context retention and the paging channel. This attack is unique not only because it exploits vulnerable cellular services to target mobile devices hut also because the victim mobile users are unaware when their batteries are being drained. Furthermore, we identify two key vulnerable components in cellular networks and propose mitigation strategies for protecting cellular devices from such attacks from the Internet.